# Real-World Effectiveness of Boosting Against Omicron Hospitalization in Older Adults, Stratified by Frailty

**Authors:** Liang En Wee, Enoch Xue Heng Loy, Jue Tao Lim, Wei Hao Kwok, Calvin Chiew, Christopher Lien, Barbara Helen Rosario, Ian Yi Onn Leong, Reshma Aziz Merchant, David Chien Boon Lye, Kelvin Bryan Tan

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/vaccines13060565 · 2025-05-26

## TL;DR

Boosting reduced Omicron hospitalization risks in older adults, but additional doses had limited benefit for frail individuals who had prior infections.

## Contribution

The study provides real-world evidence on booster effectiveness in frail older adults during Omicron, highlighting differential benefits based on frailty and infection history.

## Key findings

- First boosters reduced hospitalization risks across all frailty categories in infection-naïve older adults.
- Additional boosters did not further reduce risks in frail individuals with prior infections.
- High-frailty individuals showed limited benefit from boosting during Omicron/XBB/JN.1 transmission.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Older adults with frailty are at-risk of worse outcomes following respiratory-viral-infections such as COVID-19. Data on effectiveness of vaccination/boosting in frail older adults during Omicron is lacking. Methods: National healthcare-claims data and COVID-19 registries were utilized to enroll a cohort of older Singaporeans (≥60 years) as of 1 January 2022, divided into low/intermediate/high-risk for frailty; matching weights were utilized to adjust for sociodemographic differences/vaccination uptake at enrolment across frailty categories. Competing-risk-regression (Fine-Gray) taking death as a competing risk, with matching weights applied, was utilized to compare risks of COVID-19-related hospitalizations and severe COVID-19 across frailty levels (low/intermediate/high-risk), with estimates stratified by booster status. Individuals were followed up until study end-date (20 December 2023). Results: 874,160 older adults were included during Omicron-predominant transmission; ~10% had intermediate/high-frailty-risk. Risk of hospitalization/severe COVID-19 was elevated in those with intermediate/high-frailty-risk up to XBB/JN.1 transmission. Boosting was associated with decreased risk of COVID-19-related hospitalization across all frailty categories in infection-naïve individuals. However, in infection-naïve older adults with high-frailty-risk, while receipt of first boosters was associated with lower risk of COVID-19-hospitalization/severe COVID-19, additional booster doses did not reduce risk. In reinfected older adults, first boosters were still associated with lower hospitalization risk (adjusted-hazards-ratio, aHR = 0.55, 95% CI = 0.33–0.92) among the non-frail, but not in the intermediate/high-frailty-risk minority. Conclusions: First boosters were associated with reduced adverse COVID-19 outcomes across all frailty categories in infection-naïve older adults during Omicron. However, in the high-frailty minority, boosting did not additionally reduce risk in reinfected individuals with hybrid immunity, and beyond the first booster for infection-naïve individuals.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MONDO:0100096)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** death (MESH:D003643), infection (MESH:D007239), Frailty (MESH:D000073496), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12197443/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12197443